No human being wants to be ruled by their people's murderers.
Forgiveness through restorative justice may be possible, but being ruled
by murderers is asking for too much.

Yet, that seems to be the Hobson's choice behind the Afghan
presidential election, which is into its run-off between Dr. Abdullah /
Mohaqiq's team and Dr. Ashraf Ghani / General Dostum's team, neither
team having won more than 50% of balloted votes in the first round.

Both teams have members who are warlords accused of human rights abuses, as reported by the New York Times,
including Dr. Abdullah Abdullah's running mate, Mohammed Mohaqiq, and
General Dostum, who is Dr. Ashraf Ghani's vice-presidential candidate.

General Dostum, allegedly on the CIA's payroll in the past,
apologized for his past war crimes when he registered as Dr. Ashraf
Ghani's vice-presidential candidate. One of those crimes is the Dasht-e-Leili massacre which occurred in the fall of 2001. New York Times and Newsweek
investigations alleged that hundreds or even thousands of surrendering
pro-Taliban prisoners died of thirst, hunger and gunshots when they were
stuffed into shipping containers for transport to an Afghan prison.

Both presidential hopefuls in the run-off elections on June 14th
have already vowed to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement, which
President Obama mentioned in his surprise visit to Bagram Air Base in
Kabul, not even bothering to visit President Karzai who declined to
visit him at Bagram.

Article 7 of the Bilateral Security Agreement,
states that, "Afghanistan hereby authorizes United States forces to
control entry to agreed facilities and areas that have been provided for
United States forces' exclusive use"" and also that "Afghanistan shall
provide all agreed facilities and areas without charge to United States
forces."

- Advertisement -

Article 13 includes this: "Afghanistan ... agrees that the United
States shall have the exclusive right to exercise jurisdiction over such
persons in respect of any criminal or civil offenses committed in the
territory of Afghanistan."

It is understandable that President Karzai isn't willing to sign the agreement. It may leave a disastrous legacy.

I asked an activist who has been working in Afghanistan for ten years
what he thought about the run-off in Afghanistan's elections. "Many
Afghans, and people all over the world, are getting more and more
cynical about elections," he told me. "And they should be, because how
did our psyche become conditioned to accept that by electing corrupt,
selfish, proud, wealthy and violent elites every four or five years, our
ordinary lives will be changed? Our planet is exasperatingly unequal
and militarized. To place in power the ones who continue this status quo
is bizarre."

David Swanson is the author of "When the World Outlawed War," "War Is A Lie" and "Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union." He blogs at http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works for the online (more...)